Good Morning Britain fans were baffled over a question Richard Madeley asked one of ITV's reporters during the latest episode. The presenter and co-host Susanna Reid were back at the helm of the news programme on Wednesday (June 15).
27.05.2022 - 12:41 / deadline.com
After taking home the Un Certain Regard Fipresci prize in 2018 for the trans-female ballet dancer feature Girl, filmmaker Lukas Dhont returned to home to find himself staring at the blank page for his next project.
That would ultimately be this year’s in competition movie, Close, which grapples with teen suicide and has a lot of buzz on the ground that it could take the Palme d’Or. A24 announced the stateside pick-up of Close last night on the pic’s premiere here on the Croisette.
“I didn’t know what I was going to do, I had all sorts of proposals,” the Belgian director said during Close‘s Cannes Film Festival conference this morning. “I had a lot of doubts, I was racked by my doubts.”
“I was much more aware of myself, and I knew a lot of people looked at me,” Dhont explained, “I wanted to do something with the same intensity and passion as Girl.”
Dhont returned to the primary school close to where his mother lived. “I wanted to remember the child I was for the sake of that child,” he said.
“She said to me with great confidence and trust, ‘I’m sure you exactly know what you want to do,'” he continued, “and that was the beginning.”
Close from Lukas Dhont, follows the friendship of two 13-year old boys, Leo and Remi, the latter of which commits suicide. Leo is convinced he’s to blame. Struggling to understand what has happened, he approaches Sophie, Rémi’s mother.
Dhont explained how crucial it was to find the boys, Eden Dambrine and Gustav De Waele, who play Leo and Remi. That boils down to spending a lot of time with them in the casting.
In regards to directing kids who haven’t acted before, Dhont said it’s “not something you can force, it needs to be there.”
“With young people for me it’s important for me not to put too much
Good Morning Britain fans were baffled over a question Richard Madeley asked one of ITV's reporters during the latest episode. The presenter and co-host Susanna Reid were back at the helm of the news programme on Wednesday (June 15).
A mother and grandmother from Arizona have been charged with first-degree murder following the death of a 9-year-old girl.
Police have released an image of a man they would like to speak to following a sexual assault which happened in Stockport.
Amber Heard is opening up about the verdict in her defamation trial against ex-husband Johnny Depp.
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Grand Prix: (TIE) “Close,” Lukas Dhont; and “Stars at Noon,” Claire DenisJury Prize: (TIE) “The Eight Mountains,” Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch; and “Eo,” Jerzy SkolimowskiBest Director: Park Chan-Wook, “Decision to Leave”Best Screenplay: “Boy From Heaven,” Tarik SalehBest Actor: Song Kang Ho, “Broker”Best Actress: Zar Amir Ebrahami, “Holy Spider”75th anniversary special award: Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, “Tori and Lokita”Camera d’Or (best first film): “War Pony,” Riley Keough and Gina GammellCamera d’Or, special mention: “Plan 75,” Hayakawa ChiePalme d’Or, Short Film: “The Water Murmurs,” Jianying ChenShort film special mention: “Lori,” Abinash Bikram Shah
Police have released an image of a man they want to speak with after a 13-year-old girl was sexually assaulted in a town centre alleyway. Greater Manchester Police said the image was used on a social media account that was contacting the victim before the incident.
Police have launched an urgent appeal to find Love Island star Kendall Rae Knight's mum Jane Prior, 60, who has gone missing with eight year old Darcy Shea. Darcy went missing from her primary school in Blackpool this morning, Friday 27 May, at 9am. It's believed Jane is known to Darcy, but that she did not have permission to take the girl from school.The eight year old isn't thought to be in danger.
Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele) are more than just friends and not at all lovers. At only 13 years of age, they’re too young for that – and what’s more, their bond transcends simple labels. First seen running through the lush meadows of rural Belgium, the duo share a complicity that is as natural and abundant as the late summer harvest.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticSPOILER ALERT: The penultimate paragraph of this review contains spoilers.Few of us are fortunate enough to have a friendship as intimate and effortless as the one shared by 13-year-old Belgian boys Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele) in “Close.” That connection, and the responsibility that comes with it, is at the heart of Lukas Dhont’s sophomore feature, so subtle and sensitive in the first half, so devastatingly false from its tragic twist on. This beautifully evocative film, which hails from an openly queer director, offers as pure a portrait of innocent, innocuous same-sex affection as we’ve ever encountered on film.
CANNES – Lukas Dhont’s second feature, “Close,” starts off where most love stories end, and, in that respect, it begins with almost euphoric joy. Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele) are the best of friends.
Belgium’s Lukas Dhont takes a deserved step up to the Cannes Film Festival competition with Close, only his second film — a minimalist melodrama that shows a definite growth in visual style but may be confronting to some with its deliberately unhurried, Eric Rohmer-esque aesthetic. The international success of Dhont’s well-intentioned debut Girl, about a young trans-female ballet dancer, was somewhat blunted in the U.S., where G.L.A.A.D. amplified complaints of misrepresentation on behalf of the trans lobby. Close is a much safer proposition, but may yet sail into choppy waters with its themes of youth suicide.
A24 has picked up North American rights to Lukas Dhont’s Close.
A24 has made another acquisition out of Cannes, acquiring the North American rights to “Close,” the next film from Lukas Dhont, which is set to debut tonight in the main competition at Cannes. Dhont is the director of 2018’s “Girl,” which won the Camera d’Or at Cannes, and the film stars Eden Dambrine and Gustav De Waele, and Émilie Dequenne, Léa Drucker, Kevin Janssens, Marc Weiss, Igor Van Dessel, and Léon Bataille.“Close” is described as a film about friendship and responsibility and follows two 13-year-old boys, Léo and Rémi, whose friendship suddenly gets disrupted.
Manori Ravindran International EditorGlobal streamer and distributor MUBI has struck again, this time snapping up select markets for Lukas Dhont’s keenly anticipated “Close.”MUBI has acquired the U.K., Ireland, Latin America, Turkey and India.The film stars Lea Drucker, Émilie Dequenne, Kevin Janssens and newcomers Eden Dambrine and Gustav De Waele. “Close” will receive its world premiere on Thursday at the festival, where it’s playing in competition.The film will be released theatrically followed by an exclusive MUBI streaming release.“Girl,” Dhont’s debut feature film, won the Camera d’Or at Cannes in 2018.